iOS 11 Will Prevent Your iPhone From Automatically Connecting To Unreliable Wi-Fi Networks (trustedreviews.com) 88
A new feature spotted in iOS 11 beta 2 intelligently manages wireless networks based on their reliability, learning to ignore those that are too far away to provide a consistent experience. TrustedReviews reports: It follows the company's Wi-Fi Assist feature which meant handsets would switch to a data connection when Wi-Fi networks became too slow. Naturally, users weren't thrilled with the resulting data usage issues, and it seems Apple is looking to do better this time around. This new feature will disable "Auto join" for any network which suffers from low speed issues or is deemed to be generally unreliable. Users will, of course, still be able to join these networks manually, but the change should prevent the frustration that comes from iPhones automatically joining networks users know to be inadequate. At this point, there's no way to know how well the feature will work, and there will undoubtedly be issues when it eventually arrives in iOS 11.
Of course, of course... (Score:1)
Of course, it is a well known fact, corporations always know better than the customer, especially with regards to their needs.
Sketchy Wifi maybe more of a concern (Score:3)
so it won't work with most hotel wifi?
"Of course it will very very much.
Please enjoy here shopping and banking online."
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Isn't this one of the problems that HTTPs is supposed to fix? The wifi might be bugged, but you can verify you are really talking to the bank and then establish a secure connection over HTTPs and your details are protected.
If it were any other way you would be pretty much screwed because your packets have to pass through many untrusted servers on their way to the bank.
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Isn't this one of the problems that HTTPs is supposed to fix? The wifi might be bugged, but you can verify you are really talking to the bank and then establish a secure connection over HTTPs and your details are protected.
If it were any other way you would be pretty much screwed because your packets have to pass through many untrusted servers on their way to the bank.
Maybe. [netcraft.com]
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It doesn't. It joins known networks to which you've previously connected. You can also tell it to forget a network.
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Orphaned again...
Re: Of course, of course... (Score:2)
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10 years without a UI update is EXACTLY what I would want in an OS. The whole point of an OS is to allow me to run software and stay the hell out of my way. Changing a usable UI just for the sake of changing it is just a learning curve nobody needs.
EXACTLY.
The opposite of that is what you got with the Windows 7 to 8 transition.
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Re: Of course, of course... (Score:1)
but I'll still take it over the android way, my inlaws get a new Samsung note every other year and every time it's a totally new learning curve trying to find where all the settings got moved to this time.
I know you can install your own launcher on android and get mostly the same experience,
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If you wanted control, you would never go for apple. Apple is for sheep. :)
Listen, FUCKTARD:
1. You can disable Auto-Join.
2. You can tell it to "Forget" a Network.
3. It NEVER Joins a "NEW" (never previously connected) Network without ASKING first.
So, take your HATER BULLSHIT and SHOVE IT UP YOUR ANONYMOUS, COWARDLY ASS!!!
Got it?
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No, don't hold back. Tell us how you really feel.
(um, it's just a phone...)
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No, don't hold back. Tell us how you really feel.
(um, it's just a phone...)
Tell that to the Haters.
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Eh? This isn't about you losing any control - you retain the choice to join any WiFi network you like.
It's about the OS not choosing to auto-join ones that don't work.
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Recent XKCD post (Score:5, Insightful)
There's actually a very recent XKCD post about reliability of WiFi versus cellular: https://xkcd.com/1865/ [xkcd.com]
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hmmm... chipset conspiracy and collusion? Cellular brings in more money for the providers...
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90% of wifi nodes are the isps modem that they rent you. Placed in a convient spot for cable tv but not broadcasting wireless. I have always had my own routers and ap's and as such speeds are decent and coverage is great. My current house if setup the traditional way would have coverage for the main house barely. My setup with an outside ap and ceiling mounting ap covers the house, the garage the driveway and half the back yard in usable signal.
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It's not like, with apple devices, using an uncongested 5GHz band will help, unless you know enough to tune down your 2.4G radios so the 5GHz signal is always at least 3dB stronger, and play with the beacon interval to make 5GHz statistically more likely to be seen. And, make sure you aren't still joined to the AP by the door you came in from, because Apple wifi drivers won't let go of it despite being right next to another AP.
I can't wait to see what new hell iOS11 brings to our enterprise setup.
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Heheh. I know who YOU are. Congratulations on stalking me into a completely apolitical thread.
So... not actually addressing the issue (Score:2)
Nothing there suggests that users still won't get bumped to a cellular network should the wireless one be deemed to be slow / unreliable (what is "slow"? Is that configurable?) just that you have to force the connection as it has been flagged. Will the forced connection remain even if it is "unreliable"?
How about just a notification on the icon (like a ! ) to easily let the user know the connection isn't up to snuff for whatever reason? Then the _user_ can decide if they want to go on a (potentially metered
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Yeah I know: "add". I even corrected the auto-correct, but it auto-corrected itself...
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> but it auto-corrected itself...
This is eerily self-referencial. There's another post up there about "corporations knowing better than end users", and I was about to answer that what infuriates me is "software know better than end users", which to me is designer meta-arrogance. Utterly insulting.
Sadly, you even meet this pattern in free software!
Then, there you have it: your autocorrect knows better than you.
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That is a feature (or is it a bug?) that is easily disabled [google.com]. One could argue that it ought to be turned off by default, rather than turned on. I've had it off for years. Considering that turning WiFi on an off is one swipe and tap away in most circumstances, it is trivial for me (or anyone else) to fall back on cellular data when the WiFi is crappy.
I'll ask the audi
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I think it's useful to the extent that the WiFi "signal strength" meter is 3 bars of meaningless information, and I'm often in a location where I get "1 bar" WiFi. I *could* let the app time out, swipe around to turn off WiFi (and forget to turn it back on) and then just use cellular, but it seems to me that assist prevents most data timeouts and gets me the useful information I'm looking for without a bunch of manual intervention.
Of course, it's mostly when I'm doing something that requires a small amount
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again, the consumer is kept dumb.
the intelligent thing to do, would be to INFORM the user that wifi is crappy and SHOW him/her
a nice graph (of detected APs and their used channels) that explains WHY the wifi is crappy.
but nooooo, the consumer is just a big baby that needs to have decisions made for them.
i am sure all apple wifi products are thus superior and will get a higher threshold of "crappyness" before the ...
apple lus3r is disconnected from them
note: there are many free wifi "spectrum scanners" out there. the people that making these are very nice.
i am sorry if my suggestion might remove some revenue stream, but it is for the grater good of mankind : P
You have so little understanding of human nature, it is actually frightening.
Go back to your Mom's basement. That's where you belong.
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I have this happen to me all the time. I happen to have an Xfinity cable, and my phone automatically connects to any Xfinity hotspots when I'm outside the home. They usually suck, and I have to go to settings and turn wifi off. I hate having to do that, because I usually forget to turn it back on!
I'm looking forward to this
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What? Your home wifi doesn't have a unique SSID?
It occurred to me long ago that a great attack vector would be to have an open network with a common default SSID. Especially for people who's gadgets autoconnect to whatever their default wireless name is at home.
I don't connect to any open wireless network named after an ISP or a router manufacturer, and all the wifi systems I've set up have unique, meaningful names. (And they're not open, but that's another discussion.)
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Nothing there suggests that users still won't get bumped to a cellular network should the wireless one be deemed to be slow / unreliable (what is "slow"? Is that configurable?) just that you have to force the connection as it has been flagged. Will the forced connection remain even if it is "unreliable"?
How about just a notification on the icon (like a ! ) to easily let the user know the connection isn't up to snuff for whatever reason? Then the _user_ can decide if they want to go on a (potentially metered) cellular network. This can have an configuration option (default off) that automatically does this should the user be on an unmetered plan.
Given the options of "pay and get the content (probably an add) quicker" or "I can wait a few more seconds for free" even iPhone users would probably choose the latter.
Yeah, Apple is evil, and wants you to spend money ON A CELL NETWORK THEY DON'T OWN.
Riiiight.
Fucking Haters.
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No, my point was that to give the user the fastest response the phone switches networks for them. The priority is on the speed of transfer (which is fair enough, users want content NOW),, not any associated cost that might arise from it.
Maybe Apple think that if you can afford their stuff you're most likely on an unmetered plan or don't mind a few dollars extra on your bill at the end of the month. Or maybe they didn't even consider the unintended circumstance because it didn't affect any of those who thoug
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No, my point was that to give the user the fastest response the phone switches networks for them. The priority is on the speed of transfer (which is fair enough, users want content NOW),, not any associated cost that might arise from it.
Maybe Apple think that if you can afford their stuff you're most likely on an unmetered plan or don't mind a few dollars extra on your bill at the end of the month. Or maybe they didn't even consider the unintended circumstance because it didn't affect any of those who thought it was a good idea. I'd go with the latter because of the complaints mentioned in TFS.
I think that any algorithm may have corner-cases and weighting-issues; and I also think that Apple will need some real-world data to tune said algorithm.
IOW, it's too soon to tell.
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Soon, you'll die. But, alas, not soon enough.
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Haven't you heard? There's no team working on AirPort products at Apple anymore. That means even Apple users need to buy bug-ridden, backdoor-infested routers from crap companies now.
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Haven't you heard? There's no team working on AirPort products at Apple anymore. That means even Apple users need to buy bug-ridden, backdoor-infested routers from crap companies now.
Which actually concerns me greatly. Since they were never one of the growing number of router and AP brands that had exploits.
Guess I need to buy one of their AC routers before they're all gone...
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Soon you will need to have iRouters and iAcceePoints if you want to use apple devices.
Hey dumbass!
In case you didn't notice before you posted your fucking SCREED, Apple exited the Router/AP business about a year ago.
Do try to keep up, if you're going to spew HATE.
No way of knowing... (Score:1)
Well given that there's a public beta and your website is called TrustedReviews, how about you do your job, install the beta, and review how it works? Or are you just going to regurgitate information you found on the web? Because that's not a review I trust.
How about deleting old networks (Score:2)
So: does anyone know of a way to get iOS to list all the WiFi networks it has remembered, so that
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hummm, well, it's 2017, and has been in every windows distro or android, so this must exist in iOS too
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OS X and iOS have been exchanging WiFi connections for ages so I wonder if you delete it from OS X, if that will delete it from iOS as well.
I can't test is as this feature for some reason does not work with my iCloud account and I can't get it to work.
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Let me guess, it would check the MAC Address of the WiFi AP.
00-1B-63 (hex) Apple Inc.
if the MAC address doesn't match, the network is "unreliable".
Or, if some proprietary "apple handshake" fails, the network is unreliable.
Basically, if it's not apple branded hardware, it's unreliable.
Hey DUMBASS:
Apple went OUT of the Router/AP business over a YEAR ago.
Stupid fucking Hater. DIE MOTHERFUCKER DIE!!!
old beta had this as well (Score:2)
what really is intriguing is the evaluation of the network bandwidth since apple can not even set the captive portal detection server they run to send HTTP headers correctly to no-cache... I'd like to see their workings and I'm sure the network administrators who control the MDM systems would as well...
Apple has quite an investment in the enterprise space and a change to networking would be quite a change...
regards
John Jones
Why not just let users set a signal threshhold? (Score:2)
I have this same problem on my Android phone. Both my cellular and my home internet ISPs have hotspots all over the place that I can use for "free" (read included with my plans). They really do have heavy coverage which is handy if you are in a business or public venue or whatever and can connect to their "free" wifi. The problem is, I may walk into a business that is a few doors down from one with a hotspot, and my phone will happily connect to the SSID at -85 dBm. This is not a particularly useable sig
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Obviously asking users to understand what signal strength in dB means is not an option. They could have a slider or something, though. "poor-low-med-high' etc. In the meantime, you can enable "Aggressive Wi-Fi to Mobile handover" in developer options.
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Then I end up on LTE when I am at home sitting next to my access point. I'm not sure how it is trying to measure "bandwidth", but it does not work well.
What constitutes unreliable? (Score:1)
And how long before blocking malware/adware/marketing at the router level considered "unreliable"?
Lagging behind as usual... (Score:2)
I believe Android has had this feature since at least the 4.0 days. It definitely seems like a must. Apple is too focused on shiny toys to attract their baby-like fans instead of actual technical solutions people need. Oh well, glad they've finally gotten it.
It may be deemed unreliable, but.... (Score:2)
Sounds good to me, if it is what I think it is (Score:2)
At home when storms roll through my crappy cable internet can die on my but the Wi-Fi signal will still be strong. My iPhone will keep hammering away at the Wi-Fi because it sees a signal but it goes no where. If I disable the Wi-Fi and use the cellular network instead then I can go back to my e-mail, surf the web, or whatever. If the iPhone was smart enough to switch to cellular data when the Wi-Fi internet connection dies on me then that would be convenient. When the Wi-Fi internet comes back, because
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At home when storms roll through my crappy cable internet can die on my but the Wi-Fi signal will still be strong. My iPhone will keep hammering away at the Wi-Fi because it sees a signal but it goes no where
Fair enough. A great wifi radio signal with no backhaul would be kind of the opposite of my issue and just as annoying. Hopefully future solutions will consider all the various failure modes.
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You could swap your iPhone with an Android phone and this problem will be fixed.
Or you could want until the iOS update with this feature and you phone will start ignoring your home WiFi completely, even when there is no storm.
Like Android? (Score:2)
My Nexus6 wont connect to wifi in China if the phone is connected .... why? because Google considers a network to be seriously broken if you can't access Google's servers .... so Google thinks your expensive roaming connection is the only valid connection you have
You can get around this by doing the counter intuitive going into flight mode and then tuirning on wifi
While it's arguable that the connection IS broken it's still useful (wechat works for example) even if you're stuck with bing
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You can turn off mobile data without flight mode. You can still use the cellular connection for calling and text messaging.
I have an idea (Score:2)
Perhaps the phone should only automatically connect to networks the user has requested it do so.
Like on my laptop, there is a "Connect automatically" checkbox.
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Like on my laptop, there is a "Connect automatically" checkbox.
Yes. We would like a "Connect automatically if this network is better than the one I'm on" checkbox, with a handful of parameters to define better.